Recognising & Managing Sepsis in NSW...SEPSIS KILLS Recognising & Managing Sepsis in NSW Mary...

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SEPSIS KILLSRecognising & Managing Sepsis in NSW

Mary Fullick, Sepsis LeadJoe-Anne Bendall, Manager HAI

Clinical Excellence Commission

Australasian College for Infection Prevention and Control 7th International Conference - 21 November 2018

CLINICAL EXCELLENCE COMMISSION

THE PROBLEM IN NSW

• 167 sepsis related incidents over 18 months

• Failure to recognise sepsis in wards and ED

• Failure to take appropriate and timely action

• Poor patient outcomes

• Failure to see sepsis as a medical emergency

Source: Westmead Hospital, 2014

Aim: Improve sepsis recognition and management and reduce preventable harm to patients in NSW hospitals

NSW SEPSIS KILLS commenced 2011

RECOGNISERisk factors, signs and symptoms of sepsis

RESUSCITATE With rapid IV antibiotics and fluids within 60 minutes

REFER To specialist care and initiate retrieval if needed

SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT

• Sepsis Toolkit• Pathways• Antibiotic and

blood cultureguidelines

• Patient stories• Case studies• Videos• E-learning• Webinars• Info for

patient/family

• BTF safety net• Standard

Charts• Clinical Review• Rapid

Response

• CEC database• Time to abs

and fluids• Data linkage

COLLABORATIVE APPROACH

Sepsis Learning Sessions -webinar

Teleconferences

Tools and resources

Statewide and Local

Workshops

Site visits

Clinical leadership and

Executive support

Improvement science: PDSA

cycles

Phone support

TIMELINE

Sepsis Adult Emergency

2010 2013

Paediatric Emergency

+ REACH

2014

Inpatientwards

2016

All pathways published as

medical record forms

Maternal and Newborn

2015 2011

Sepsis Pilot in 5 EDs

SEPSIS PATHWAYS

Guide to ‘think sepsis’

NOT prescriptive ……clinical judgement is KEY

Senior medical staff involvement

Consider sepsis any time your patient deteriorates

AND/OR have signs and symptoms of infection

PLUS Red or Yellow Zone observations

OR a clinician is concerned/suspects sepsis

EVALUATION

Give oxygen

Take a lactate

Take blood cultures

Give empirical intravenous antibiotics

Administer intravenous fluids

Monitor, reassess and clinical handover

BUNDLE: SIX ACTIONS

PROCESS DATA

ANTIBIOTICS: ADULTS

ANTIBIOTICS: PAEDIATRICS

OUTCOME DATA

% of patients with a sepsis diagnosis who die in a NSW hospital 2009 -2018

ED launch

12.9%

Overall 30% decrease

CHALLENGESInpatient vs ED uptake

Medical engagement and leadership (ID vital)

Deterioration post initial treatment

Monitoring and feedback loops

Unintended consequences

- Broad diagnostic parameters + emphasis on abs within 60 mins

- Missed cultures

- Antibiotics not reviewed when results are available

………all pathways revised with AMS experts Sept 2016

RELIABILILITY

What matters to the patient?

Every patient every time - ED and wards

What else is needed to achieve reliability?

1. Electronic sepsis alert in the eMR

2. Deteriorating patient BTF education

3. Systems improvement• Enhance LHD/hospital implementation fidelity • Spread and sustainability

4. Evaluation using linked data sets

CURRENT AND FUTURE PRIORITIES

20

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

• NSW Health clinicians + clinical governance units

• CEC Adult Patient Safety and Paediatric teams

• CEC Deteriorating Patient/Sepsis Committees

• UK Sepsis Trust, 1000 Lives/NHS Wales, British Columbia Sepsis Network

Mary.Fullick@health.nsw.gov.auCEC-sepsis@health.nsw.gov.auhttp://www.cec.health.nsw.gov.au/patient-safety-programs/adult-patient-safety/sepsis-kills